It's common especially with players who fire their airsoft weapons like real steel weapons (slow trigger pulls instead of firm quick pulls).
Many will say use a Mosfet to prevent this from happening, when the honest truth is that it doesn't prevent, just slows it down a bit. I personally rather spend the $10 on new contacts when they go out. It's not a common occurance.

It's common especially with players who fire their airsoft weapons like real steel weapons (slow trigger pulls instead of firm quick pulls).
Many will say use a Mosfet to prevent this from happening, when the honest truth is that it doesn't prevent, just slows it down a bit. I personally rather spend the $10 on new contacts when they go out. It's not a common occurance.

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Well, with the few milliamps that goes through the trigger contacts with a correctly designed and wired mosfet unit, it will take 300 years for them to fry. Your JG will run perfectly fine on the battery you mention. It's a common misconception that a higher discharge battery does more damage, the battery doesn't do any damage at all, it's the motor that decides how current goes through the wires. I run 11,1v li-po's that can deliver 56A continously, and 112 amps in short bursts, but my trigger contacts would probably hold up fairly well without a mosfet unit, because the motor is extremely efficient and draws very little current.